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Splitting Atoms

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Splitting Atoms

Tag Archives: Dr. Fate

Convergence #8 (July 2015)

28 Thursday May 2015

Posted by FKAjason in Cameo, Convergence

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Andy Kubert, Barbara Gordon, Batman, Blue Beetle, Brad Anderson, Bronze Age Captain Atom, Captain Atom, Carlo Pagulayan, Dick Grayson, Dr. Fate, Eduardo Pansica, Ethan Van Sciver, Green Lantern (Alan Scott), Green Lantern (Guy Gardner), Green Lantern (John Stewart), Jason Paz, Jeff King, Jill Thompson, John Romita Jr., John Starr, Judomaster, Nightshade, Peacemaker, Peter Steigerwald, Scott Hanna, Scott Lobdell, Stephen Segovia, Supergirl, Superman, The Flash, The Question, Tomeu Morey, Tony S. Daniel, Travis Lanham

“Last Stand”

  • Writers:  Jeff King, Scott Lobdell
  • Pencils:  Stephen Segovia, Carlo Pagulayan,Eduardo Pansica, Ethan Van Sciver
  • Inks:  Jason Paz, Scott Hanna, Trevor Scott,Stephen Segovia, Ethan Van Sciver
  • Colors:  John Starr, Peter Steigerwald
  • Letters:  Travis Lanham
  • Cover Artists:  Andy Kubert, Brad Anderson, Tony S. Daniel, Tomeu Morey, Jill Thompson, John Romita, Jr.

Going into Convergence, I said I was going to wait until it was over to review it.  As Captain Atom’s role in the actual mini-series was limited, I decided not to.  Besides, as a kid I was always told if I couldn’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all.  And I’ve found very little “nice” to say about this series.  I understand what DC Comics was doing here but I didn’t like it.  From 1935 – 1985, the DC Universe was never “rebooted.”  Since 1985’s Crisis on Infinite Earths, we’ve had Zero Hour, Final Crisis, Flashpoint, and now Convergence.  Why are they so trigger-happy with that reset button?  I’ve decided I’m done with DC for a while.  If they bring back Captain Atom or Firestorm, I’ll buy them.  But that might not ever happen (however, if the Legends of Tomorrow TV series is a success, Firestorm may be back in a big way, and the door was left open on The Flash for a season 2 Captain Atom appearance).

The Bronze Age Captain Atom appears in the background four times in this issue, although his costume coloring is slightly wrong.

That last panel seems to indicate that the original Charlton heroes do indeed “evolve” into their Multiversity counterparts.  This means we already know their fates and Captain Atom is dead once again.

(All characters and images belong to DC Comics and I am not making any profit off this blog.)

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The Weird (April 1988 – July 1988)

16 Friday May 2014

Posted by FKAjason in Captain Atom Versus Aliens, Captain Atom Versus Super-Heroes, Captain Atom Versus Super-Villains, Justice League

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Batman, Bernie Wrightson, Black Canary, Blue Beetle, Captain Atom, Dan Green, Dr. Fate, Green Lantern (Guy Gardner), Jim Starlin, Michelle Wrightson, Modern Age Captain Atom, Nuklon, Obsidian, Superman, The Weird, Todd Klein

“Conception”

  • Writer:  Jim Starlin
  • Pencils & Inks:  Bernie Wrightson & Dan Green
  • Colors:  Michelle Wrightson
  • Letters:  Todd Klein

The Weird was a four-issue mini-series featuring the Justice League.  Although text within issue #1 indicated that the series took place prior to Justice League International #7, Captain Atom is on the team (he was added to the team at the end of Justice League International #7).

The mini-series opens with Superman on a Metropolis rooftop, surveying the city.  At street level, an overcoated man walks to his dreary apartment building in the rain.  The name on his door reads “Jason Morgan.”  Inside, he removes his coat and sits on the bathroom floor.  He has strange green crystalline growths all over his body.  Yellow energy rings appear before him as he says, “Soon the bridge will be completed, my friends.”  He conjures up a red crystal, out of which a white orb flies as it crumbles apart.  The orb shoot out of the apartment, creating a massive explosion in the sky.

Superman notes that no damage was done and he flies in the investigate further.  He finds the white orb, which he calls a star.  It changes shape into a ribbon and Superman touches it.  With another explosion, Superman is thrown back three miles.  When he returns to the ribbon, Captain Atom and Martian Manhunter are on the scene.

Thirty minutes later, the military arrives.  By now most of the Justice League is on the scene (Green Lantern Guy Gardner, Dr. Fate, Blue Beetle, Black Canary, and Batman).

Onboard Blue Beetle’s Bug, Batman and a Dr. Yamada are collecting data on the ribbon, which the doctor says will take months to collate.  Outside, Cap says the thing shouldn’t even exist (as it is pure energy it should have dispersed with no form to hold it together).  Dr. Fate says it does have a mystical quality, and Guy Gardner uses his ring as a “deep probe” to try and get more info.  Guy overdoes it with the green juice, which causes the ribbon to let out an explosion of energy and black out the city.  Martian Manhunter and Captain Atom quickly catch the crashing Bug.

From a nearby rooftop, the heroes watch the ribbon split into two parts and rush off into different directions.  Superman follows one and Martian Manhunter follows the other.  Superman fails at catching the thing as it flies into a genetic research lab.  It passes through “genetic fluids” before entering a computer, where it seems to be gathering data.  It launches out of the computer and flies off with Superman on it’s tail.

Meanwhile, at a funeral home across town, Martian Manhunter has followed the other energy ball into a funeral service.  The energy goes into the casket, making the dead man inside vanish.

The two energy balls return to the site of the original ribbon and combine.  The resulting explosion causes a nearby building to crumble.  When Guy goes to stop the falling debris, he is beaten to the punch by the ribbon.  In an effort to contain anymore explosions, Guy surrounds the ribbon with an energy bubble.  The heroes watch as inside a human creature is created.  It emerges onto a nearby rooftop, dressed like some sort of a ninja, and collapses.

An hour later at S.T.A.R. Labs, Dr. Yamada discovers that the creature’s body is filled with clear fluid rather than blood.  Using his x-ray vision, Superman learns that none of the creature’s organs are fully formed, but are “sculpting” themselves while it sleeps.  Also it has an unstable, alien molecular structure.  Superman thinks it is a living, possibly Earth-threatening atomic bomb.  Blue Beetle dubs the creature “the Weird,” and Guy Gardner offers to take it off the planet.  Superman rushes off to save the passengers of a crashing plane.  As soon as he is gone, the Weird wakes up.

When Martian Manhunter offers his arm and suggests the Weird get more rest, the creature shoves him back into a wall.  Batman orders Guy to contain the Weird with his ring, but the creature simply walks out of the green energy bubble.  Blue Beetle and Captain Atom throw themselves at the Weird, but he becomes intangible and they crash into each other.  Guy encases it in a denser energy cube, but it breaks free in an explosion that takes out most of the lab.

Captain Atom, Dr. Fate, Martian Manhunter, and Batman take the fight to the rooftops in an attempt to contain the Weird.  Seeing that physical attacks clearly do not affect the Weird’s molecular instability, Martian Manhunter lays on an ultimately ineffectual smackdown.  Even Dr. Fate’s mystic powers have no effect on the creature.  Their efforts are in vain, and the Weird explains that his kind are excellent manipulators of energy.  Cap decides to fire quantum blasts at the thing anyway.

The Weird knocks Captain Atom out cold and escapes by passing through the walls of the building.  He finds himself at the apartment of Jason Morgan the fellow from the opening of this issue.  The apartment is vacant, leaving the Weird time for another task, in the Metropolis suburb of Inglewood.  He returns to the home of “Walt,” the man whose body he has reanimated.  In the back yard or the house, he approaches Walt’s son Billy, who instantly recognizes the disfigured face as his father’s.

And this ends the first issue.  Lots of questions and few answers.

“Questions!”

  • Writer:  Jim Starlin
  • Pencils & Inks:  Bernie Wrightson & Dan Green
  • Colors:  Michelle Wrightson
  • Letters:  Todd Klein

 

The second issue opens back at S.T.A.R. Labs, where TV reporter Lance Armstrong (I know, right?) is attempting to interview Superman in the Weird’s aftermath.  Superman gives a summary of the previous issue, but Lance turns his words around on him, saying Supes thinks he can succeed where the Justice League failed.  Guy Gardner insults Superman, but the man of steel turns that into an opportunity to insult Guy before flying away.

Back at Walter Langley’s house, his wife wonders what the Weird’s connection to her dead husband is – if any.  Checking on her son Billy, she sees he has wandered away from the backyard of their home.

Billy, meanwhile, is riding on the Weird’s back as they fly to the beach.  The Weird explains to Billy that, while he has all of Walter Langley’s memories, he is not actually the boy’s dead father.  He displays his powers for Billy (flight, super-strength, the ability to become intangible, and the ability to affect any source of energy he’s in direct contact with).  In an effort to explain what he truly is, the Weird taps directly into Billy’s brain.  The two find themselves in an alternative dimensional reality, which the Weird explains is his home.  He identifies a glowing red orb as a Macrolatt, the dominant life form of this reality (although he himself is not one).  They are immensely powerful and ruthless beings.

The Weird explains he is a Zarolatt, white orb beings which possess great stores of energy but not the ability to use it.  The Macrolatts are tapping the energy of the Zarolatts, killing the peaceful creatures.  The Weird himself was being used by a Macrolatt that was attempting to cross over into Billy’s reality (the DC Universe).  The Macrolatts found a man they called “the Jason” (Jason Morgan from the first issue) and convinced him to betray his people and allow the Macrolatts to cross over.

Jason’s physical form was slightly altered to that of a half-man, half-crystal entity.  He created the crystalline anchor that would stabilize the bridge between worlds.  Hungering for the “freedom” that Billy’s world would offer him, the Weird crossed the bridge before any of the Macrolatts could make it across.  He came face-to-face with the Jason and fled.  The Weird chose Walter’s body as a containment vessel because he would have killed any living creature he tried to possess.  He found he could utilize all the dormant abilities that were denied to him as a Zarolatt.  He explains he must face the Jason again and stop him from reopening the bridge.  The Macrolatts, if they manage to cross over, will destroy Billy’s world.

Back in Metropolis, Jason Morgan returns home singing “Waltzing Matilda” to himself.  He begins to talk to himself (perfectly normal behavior in a comic book), and reveals he has killed a woman named Matilda Gatsby.  He sets out to reopen the bridge.

Superman, still searching for the Weird, gives up in the city and heads north to check the suburbs.  Meanwhile, in the suburbs, the Weird is dropping Billy off at home.  The Weird explains it would be best if Billy didn’t tell his mother who/what he was with.  Flying away, the Weird admits to himself that his molecular structure is unstable, just as Batman warned him in the last issue.  He knows he is a dangerous ticking time-bomb.  He bumps into Superman, and the two land on a nearby rooftop to have a chat.

The Weird says he can’t leave Earth like Superman wants.  He doesn’t explain why.  Superman punches him, which doesn’t even stagger the Weird.  The Weird punches back, surprising Superman with his strength.  The Weird takes off and Superman gives chase.  They stop the chase briefly to beat each other, but the two are evenly matched.  The Weird takes off again and Supes chases.  In the basement of an abandoned apartment building, the Weird pushes some supporting beams aside and brings the whole building down on the man of steel.  In the confusion, the Weird slips away.

Lance Armstrong shows up at the scene (via his news van – not a bicycle) and attempts to get a comment from Superman.  Superman does not indulge Lance and flies away.  Then the Weird emerges from the ground below, explaining that he had been directly under Superman the whole time.  He tells Lance that Superman and his friends think he is so unstable he will destroy the world.  He flies away, but Batman is nearby and watches him.

Back at Jason Morgan’s apartment, just as he is conjuring up the bridge, the Weird appears in his bathroom with him.  So ends the second issue.  Captain Atom was only in this issue for one panel.

“Confrontation”

  • Writer:  Jim Starlin
  • Pencils & Inks:  Bernie Wrightson & Dan Green
  • Colors:  Michelle Wrightson
  • Letters:  Todd Klein

The third issue opens with Billy Langley summing up the previous two issues to his dog (cleverly – or weirdly – named “Ptang”).  Meanwhile, in Jason Morgan’s apartment bathroom, the Weird and the Jason are facing off.  For a Justice League story, this mini-series sure hasn’t featured the Justice League much.

Back in Jason Morgan’s place, he and the Weird are throwing down, smashing the place to hell.  The Jason flings energy blasts which the Weird easily deflects.  From a neighboring apartment rooftop, the Justice League watches the battle.  Batman followed the Weird here and summoned his team-mates.  Guy Gardner wants to go down for a closer look, but Dr. Fate stops him.  Guy, hot-head that he is, ignores Dr. Fate and Batman’s warning and dives in.

Jason conjures a cube-shaped shield around his apartment which prevents Guy from entering and also destroys to top half of the building.  Batman sends Dr. Fate, Captain Atom, and Martian Manhunter to protect the “civilians” while he catches the unconscious Guy.

While Batman ponders a way to get into the cube, the Jason and the Weird continue their confrontation within.  The Weird tells Jason he doesn’t want to use force against him because he knows Jason was duped by the Macrolatts, but he will resort to force if he has to.  He takes Jason by the neck.  Borrowing a page from Barry Allen’s book, Jason vibrates the molecules of air around the Weird, stunning him.  He encases the Weird in a “particle beam encasement” bubble.

Jason begins to reopen the portal while the Weird, helpless in the bubble, pleads with him to stop.  He tries to play to Jason’s humanity, but Jason says that will do no good.  He says he is turning on his own species because “life sucks.”

Outside, Dr. Fate, Batman, Black Canary, and Blue Beetle discuss the cube and their inability to penetrate it (Guy is down for the count with a bandage on his head).  Batman fears what is going on within, saying they really don’t have enough infor on the Weird to understand his motives.

Within the cube, Jason tells the Weird his tale of woe.  Named after the Jason of Greek mythology, he witnessed his father’s suicide by hanging at the age of four.  His mother became an abusive alcoholic and was murdered by a boyfriend with a razor.  He was sent to a Dickensian orphanage where he had to fight the other children and did poorly in school.  He was kicked out of the orphanage at the age of fifteen because of “a little trouble [he] got into with a girl.”  He drifted through a series of menial jobs that he always got fired from and ended up a dirty homeless beggar.  Trying to clean up his act to attract women, he got a job with the city of Metropolis as a sanitation worker (or “garbage man,” as we used to call them when we were kids”.  He didn’t mind the labor, but hated dealing with all the city’s trash.  Still unlucky with the ladies, he assaulted a woman and was thrown in prison.  Upon his release, he went back to work on the garbage truck and spiraled into alcoholism like his mother.  Then he began to have strange dreams.  It was the Macrolatts contacting his subconscious, preparing him for their coming.  They altered his physiology and promised him that when they took Earth, he would become the king of humanity.

The Weird warns Jason that he has been misled.  The Macrolatts will kill him as soon as they cross over.  Jason doesn’t believe him and lashes out.  The Weird continues to try and convince Jason the Macrolatts are bad.  The Justice League continues to try and breach the cube.  Jason continues to build the bridge.

Believing that it is the only way, the Weird determines to force his unstable body to go critical.  It will kill him and Jason, and the entire city of Metropolis to boot.  Two Macrolatts emerge from the portal just as the Weird explodes.  Somehow, the cube contains the blast, the Weird and Jason both survive (the explosion must not have been created by the Weird reaching critical mass), and the Justice League witnesses the two Macrolatts fleeing the scene.

The Macrolatts speed off at twice the speed of light, making it impossible for the Justice League to give chase.  The Weird crushes the crystal Jason used to build the bridge.  Realizing Jason was a twisted, misunderstood pawn of creatures he didn’t understand, the Weird give him a low-grade disruptive charge through his cerebral cortex, putting Jason’s mind at ease before snapping his neck.  Upon his death, the cube vanishes and the Justice League converges on the remains of the apartment.  They find the Weird standing over Jason’s dead body.

The two Macrolatts, rejuvenated by lightning over the ocean, return to Metropolis to seek host bodies.  One of them finds Superman and merges with him.  The other flies to Los Angeles, California. Finding the headquarters of Infinity, Inc., it merges with Nuklon.  Back at Jason’s apartment, the Weird tries to explain he did not murder Jason Morgan.

The Weird realizes the Justice League won’t listen to him; they’ve made up their minds.  As he tries to leave, he is knocked out cold by Martian Manhunter (J’onn J’onzz was invisible the whole time).  When Batman orders Guy to take the Weird off-world, the two Macrolatts appear (in the bodies of Nuklon and Superman) and say they’ll deal with him.

“Armageddon”

  • Writer:  Jim Starlin
  • Pencils:  Bernie Wrightson
  • Inks:  Dan Green
  • Colors:  Michelle Wrightson
  • Letters:  Todd Klein

At last, the climactic conclusion.  Batman slaps the Weird awake and demands an explanation.  The Justice League have found themselves in combat against Superman and Nuklon’s Macrolatt-possessed bodies.

The Weird gives Batman the four-panel summation of the past three issues.  Things look grim for the world, as Superman and Nuklon have not only all their original powers, but the powers of the Macrolatts as well.  Black Canary is knocked out and Batman carries her to safety as the Weird explains to him how the Macrolatts made it to this world.  The Justice League suddenly learns they are powerless against this duo.

The Weird tells Batman that fighting the Macrolatts is pointless and he won’t take any part in it.  Batman insults him and jumps into the battle.  In an attempt to “short out” a Macrolatt, he pokes Superman with an exposed live electrical cable.  Superman seems injured, but not stopped.  He breaks Batman’s arm.  Apparently thinking Batman isn’t worth his time and effort, Superman flies to Nuklon’s aid as he struggles to take down Captain Atom, the last Justice League member still standing.  They dispatch Nate with ease.

With the Justice League utterly defeated, the Weird bows down to the Macrolatts.  They two evil beings begin to burn Metropolis, feeding off the life energy of the matter (and people) they destroy.  At the scene, Lance Armstrong reports that it appears the world is coming to an end.

The Weird begs the two to stop.  He says he can help their efforts. Batman tries to stop him, but he bitch slaps the dark knight.  The Weird tells the Macrolatts they need to utilize the intellect of their host bodies as well as the power.  Nuklon blasts at the Weird for his “insolence.”  Superman takes a piece of nearby building and throws it at the Weird.  The Zarolatt becomes intangible and the debris coasts harmlessly through him.  Nuklon is taken aback by this but Superman isn’t.  The Weird warns them that heir host bodies are susceptible to illness.  He tells them they need to reach out and merge with them, as Zarolatts are meant to serve Macrolatts.  The two buy it, and fly towards the Weird.

Reaching into Nuklon and Superman, the Weird pulls the Macrolatts out.  The two previously-possessed heroes drop to the ground as the Weird tells his captives he would never allow them to harm this world.  Holding one in each hand, he appears to squash the life out of the Macrolatts.

The next morning, back at S.T.A.R. Labs, Superman indicates that the Weird is still unstable and will still reach critical mass.  He will expire in less than two days.  The Justice League have been unable to d anything to reverse the process.  He says he will leave Earth before that time comes, but asks the Justice League to help him with two things first.

Superman and Guy fly over the ocean with the Weird.  As the Weird begins to build something, the heroes leave him, vowing to return the next morning with Walter’s wife and son.  The Justice League returns the next day with Billy, finding what appears to be a pirate ship constructed of Earth.  Superman explains that Walter’s wife wouldn’t come – that she felt she couldn’t handle it.  Billy finds the whole thing extremely awesome.

The Weird has a heart-to-heart discussion with Billy, explaining that he will have to leave again and he will die.  Billy is saddened by this, begging his father to stay.  The Weird says he can not stay, but will leave this odd island for Billy to visit and remember him.  Martian Manhunter takes Billy home.

Superman and Guy take the Weird to a distant part of space, a light year away from any inhabited world.  They say their good-byes and leave Walter to his fate.  Guy and Superman watch the massive explosion from a safe distance, tearing up as they do so.  The two fly back to Earth.  Thus ends The Weird mini-series.

I didn’t like The Weird when it was first published.  From the first page, I took issue with the continuity error.  Captain Atom was not a member of the Justice League when this was supposed to have taken place.  And if it took place at the time it was published, Guy Gardner’s personality was wrong.  It still gives me a headache to think about it.  I can be such a nerd about continuity.  Plus, I never liked the name of the hero, “the Weird.”  Frankly, I thought it was stupid (the name).  And the Justice League were completely superfluous to the story. This is a C story at best.  The art, on the other hand, was definitely “A” material.  I really like the way Wrightson and Green drew Captain Atom in particular, even if he didn’t grace the pages much.  I’d say The Weird is worth checking out for the art alone.  Just don’t expect the story to blow your mind.

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Cover Run: The DC Comics Art of Adam Hughes (June 2010)

14 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by FKAjason in Justice League

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Adam Hughes, Blue Beetle, Captain Atom, Dr. Fate, Elongated Man, Fire, Flash, Gene D'Angelo, Ice, Josef Rubinstein, Martian Manhunter, Modern Age Captain Atom

I like Adam Hughes.  He’s one of the better artists to have worked on Justice League America.  He has an eye for bodies, particularly female bodies.  I liked his take on Captain Atom.  But, the cover of Justice League America #31 always bugged me.  And it is for a nitpicky little reason.  See, Captain Atom is on the cover.  But Cap isn’t in the book.  Now, he is part of the overall story arc, “The Teasdale Imperative,” but he wasn’t part of this issue, which is part one.  The cover was inked by Josef Rubinstein and colored by Gene D’Angelo. It was one of the many covers included in Cover Run: The DC Comics Art of Adam Hughes.

On a semi-related note, Splitting Atoms is one year old today.

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Booster Gold #22 (November 1987)

17 Sunday Nov 2013

Posted by FKAjason in Justice League, Team-Ups

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Batman, Black Canary, Blue Beetle, Booster Gold, Captain Atom, Dan Jurgens, Dr. Fate, Gene D'Angelo, Goldstar, Green Lantern (Guy Gardner), Martian Manhunter, Modern Age Captain Atom, Mr. Miracle, Rangor, Rocket Red #7, Skeets, Steve Haynie, Terry Austin, Ty Templeton

“Tortured Options”

  • Writer:  Dan Jurgens
  • Pencils:  Dan Jurgens
  • Inks:  Ty Templeton
  • Colors:  Gene D’Angelo
  • Letters:  Steve Haynie
  • Cover:  Dan Jurgens and Terry Austin
I always wonder if I should write it as “Boo$ter Gold.”  Spellchecker doesn’t like it that way.  Guess I’ll just conform and drop the dollar sign.  But I wonder if he was a British super-hero, would his name be something like “£eonard Gold?”
*
This is, obviously, not a Captain Atom book.  He is simply a guest star, as the newest member of the Justice League (he was added to the roster of Justice League International the same month this came out, in Justice League International (vol 1) #7).  As he really only appeared at the end of that book, posing with the other League members for a photo, this issue of Booster Gold is the first time we’ve seen Cap as a working member of the Justice League.  Prior to this, he was leader of the Sentinels of Justice, but that continuity was erased by Crisis on Infinite Earths.
*
The story opens with Booster Gold stranded in another dimension and facing a choice.  Save the life of his sister Michelle (aka Goldstar) or the lives of 30,000 people on Earth.  The alien, Rangor, is holding Michelle captive as a grey horned giant is set loose in the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis.  As Booster throttles Rangor, his robot companion Skeets reminds him that they came to Dimension X to prevent an invasion and that the invasion has begun.  Booster hesitates, then knocks Rangor out and heads into the gateway to Earth.  He sends Skeets to find his sister.
*
Booster is deposited underneath the Metrodome, and blasts straight upward into the stadium itself.  The creature rips open the roof and emerges out into Minneapolis.  Booster throws himself at the creature but finds it has the consistency of putty and he does no damage.  Meanwhile, Skeets has found Goldstar.  She is very weak and would be dead if not for her costume’s magnetic powers.  Skeets frees her from her bonds.
*
As the monster crashes through downtown Minneapolis, Booster realizes his futuristic weapons seem to have no effect on it.  This is when Justice League International shows up, to whom Booster says, “About time you guys got here.”
Responding to Booster’s call for Justice League help are Mr. Miracle, Martian Manhunter, Captain Atom, Blue Beetle, Green Lantern Guy Gardner, Black Canary, and Rocket Red.  Four of them that are capable of flight (Cap, Martian Manhunter, Rocket Red, and Mr. Miracle) dive into the fight with Booster.
*
The creature blasts energy beams out of its eyes, which don’t hurt Cap, Booster, and Martian Manhunter but blow Mr. Miracle and Rocket Red back (along with Blue Beetle’s bug, which carries Beetle, Canary, and Gardner).  Ugh, too many characters.  Guy Gardner seems like he should be on the front lines.  His ring is, after all, the most powerful weapon in the universe.  But this is during that brief time period after Batman hit him on the head and he became a gentle pacifist.
Down at street level, the other heroes begin rescuing innocents while still trying to bring the creature down.  Martian Manhunter remarks, “…It’s able to absorb even my mightiest blows.”  Mightiest blows?  Who talks like this?  Martians, I guess.  Just when the League is trading quips on how to best dispose of Guy Gardner, the creature rabs Cap and throws him against a building, knocking him out.  (Captain Atom has been knocked out cold so many times since 1960, it’s a wonder he doesn’t have permanent brain damage.)
*
After being almost smooshed by the creature, Rocket Red, Martian Manhunter, and Booster Gold concentrate their fire at it’s face (MM fires psionic blasts from his eyes).  The creature fires back, appearing to vaporize the trio.  But no, they were pulled out at the last second by Mr. Miracle and Captain Atom (who was unconscious for a remarkably short amount of time).
*
Back in Dimension X, Rangor is watching the battle in Minneapolis unfold on a monitor.  Skeets and Goldstar lurk in the shadows.  Meanwhile, at Booster’s mansion, a shadowy figure on a computer transfers money from a Swiss bank account.  This is an ongoing subplot that ties into Millenium.
*
In Minneapolis, Captain Atom uses his quantum blast powers to bore a hole into the monster.  Booster Gold flies into the hole and begins expanding his force field.  The creature expands until it bursts, leaving it’s gray putty gore all over the streets of downtown Minneapolis.
*
Meanwhile, Goldstar has been discovered.  The aliens beat her down and get ready to kill her when Booster appears and blocks their blasts.  Rangor tells them all their efforts are in vain.  He has an army poised to pass through a much larger gate, ready to invade and conquer Earth.  Goldstar and Booster book it to the chamber where the invasion force waits.  Booster has a moment of self-doubt, thinking he should have sent his sister home; she needs medical attention.  Skeets advises Booster to overload the sphere above the army from which they draw their power.  Booster does this, and it weakens the entire structure.  He scoops up his sister and flies back toward the gateway.
*
The gateway is set to receive rather than send.  Goldstar hurries to the controls to reset it and is hit with an electrical cable.  Booster sees her struck as he is propelled through the gateway.  It spits him out under the Metrodome again and then it explodes.  Out of the wreckage, Booster finds a scrap of his sister’s costume, knowing instantly that this means she is dead.
Twenty-four hours later, off the coast of Maine, a memorial service is held for Goldstar.  The Justice League is in full attendance now, including Dr. Fate.
Fate sends the hovering grave marker of Michelle Carter into “a different realm,” where it will be “forever safe from the ravages of time.”  Booster says his goodbye to his sister via internal monologue.
*
So, Captain Atom’s appearance here is really just a cameo, but it was a really important cameo because it was the first time we saw him in action as a member of the Justice League.  He remained a member – sometimes leading different branches of the League, sometimes lurking in the background – until at least 2011 (a decent 24-year run).  This issue of Booster Gold was well-written and drawn.  An important issue for Booster Gold fans, I’m sure.  If I remember correctly, Michelle “Goldstar” Carter came back to life eventually (as most dead super-heroes do).  When this came out, I didn’t give it a second glance.  Since then I’ve begun a fan of Dan Jurgens’ style.  And he’s a package deal, writing and drawing.  This is A material.

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Firestorm: The Nuclear Man #68 (February 1988)

15 Wednesday May 2013

Posted by FKAjason in Millennium, Team-Ups

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Arisia, Captain Atom, Dennis Janke, Dr. Fate, Driq, Firestorm, Green Lantern, Harbinger, Hawkman, Hawkwoman, Janice Chiang, John Ostrander, Katma Tui, Martian Manhunter, Modern Age Captain Atom, Nansi Hoolahan, Richard Howell, Steve Mitchell, Superman, The Manhunters

“Planetfall”

  • Writer: John Ostrander
  • Pencils: Richard Howell
  • Inks: Steve Mitchell, Dennis Janke
  • Colors: Nansi Hoolahan
  • Letters: Janice Chiang

Millennium was a comic book crossover event that ran through an eight-issue, self-titled, limited series and various other titles cover dated January and February 1988. The limited series was published weekly and was written by Steve Englehart, and with art by Joe Staton and Ian Gibson.  Guardian of the universe Herupa Hando Hu, and his Zamaron mate, Nadia Safir, traveled to Earth and announced to the world that they would select ten people who would become the new Guardians of the Universe, and give birth to a new race of immortals. They gathered Earth’s superheroes and sent them to find the chosen persons, who came from various parts of the world.  The robotic cult known as the Manhunters (precursors to the Green Lantern Corps) had found a sphere that Harbinger had used to store all the information she had gathered about the universe after the Crisis on Infinite Earths. Because of it, they knew the secret identities of Earth’s heroes, and had planted their agents (including androids, willing human agents, and mind-controlled ones) close to them. On finding out about the search for The Chosen, the Manhunters decided to prevent it, and had their agents reveal themselves and attack the heroes.

Captain Atom #11 was a Millennium crossover that paired Captain Atom with Firestorm.  At this point in Firestorm’s history, the Nuclear Man has undergone a “rebirth” and is very childlike.  This issue falls after the events of Captain Atom #11, in week 5 of the Millennium event.

This issue opens with a group of Earth’s heroes gathered on an asteroid above the Manhunters’ homeworld.  In attendance are Firestorm, Captain Atom, Green Lanterns Hal Jordan, Katma Tui, and Arisia, Hawkman, Martian Manhunter, Dr. Fate, Superman, and Hawkwoman and they are planning a strategy.  Firestorm is not paying any attention to the heroes.  Captain Atom tries twice to get Firestorm’s attention before the Nuclear Man simply takes off and heads for the Manhunter homeworld.  Captain Atom goes after him, telling Superman, “Firestorm seems to have become my personal problem lately.”

Beneath the surface of the Manhunter homeworld, Harbinger is on the run having been captured once by the Manhunters and then released by Green Lantern Driq.  She creates duplicates of herself to distract and attack the robot drones that are after her.  Just as one of the drones gets the drop on her, Driq shows up and blasts it with his ring. Then Driq himself is blasted.

Driq was blasted by Firestorm, who thought the zombie Green Lantern was attacking Harbinger.  Hot on Firestorm’s heels is Captain Atom, who tells Harbinger to lighten up on the nuclear man, as he is new to the duper-hero game.  Harbinger says, “New? Firestorm I know: you I don’t.”

Firestorm creates a fire extinguisher to put out Driq while Harbinger and Captain Atom chat about Driq (Driq was a Green Lantern killed in the line of duty whose ring would not let his spirit leave his body).  Firestorm apologizes to Driq, shaking his hand and knocking some of the GL’s fingers off in the process.  Firestorm quickly uses his powers to fuse the fingers back on.

Harbinger bitches at Captain Atom while Firestorm attempts to make small talk with Driq.
There is a rumble as four of the drones descend on the four super-heroes.  Firestorm creates a bridge that causes the drones to crash into each other.  As the heroes blast away at more and more oncoming drones, they cause the cavern walls to collapse.  Firestorm is knocked out as they are buried by the avalanche.

When he wakes up, he finds he is in the bayou and his friend (and Manhunter agent) Ferguson is with him.  They are outside the Sonic Temple on Earth.  Ferguson tells Firestorm that the destruction of the sonic temple was a delusion.  He thanks Firestorm for bringing him a “new ally,” Captain Atom.

Captain Atom and Ferguson tell Firestorm that he must kill their enemies.  Firestorm does not like the idea of killing anyone.  He realizes that this isn’t the real Captain Atom and that he is still on the Manhunter planet.  When the Manhunters tell him, “No man escapes the Manhunters” Firestorm responds with “I have not come to escape, but to end,” before he starts blasting the androids.

Ferguson warns that the planet is being destroyed.  He promises to reveal secrets to Firestorm if he sides with the Manhunters.  He tells the Nuclear Man that Firestorm is made up of two different beings (a fact Firestorm seems unaware of).  He rejects Ferguson, but realizes there is truth to the Manhunter’s words.

Firestorm makes contact with Ronnie Raymond and Mikhail Arkadin, the two men who are inside his head (what will later be referred to as the “Firestorm matrix”).  He seems to be on the verge of freeing them when Driq, Harbinger, and Captain Atom show up and distract him.  They blast through the planet’s crust as it shakes apart and then meet up with the other heroes up in outer space.

The comic ends with Firestorm’s inner monologue: “There is more to me… to my life… than I had imagined.  But not more than I can imagine.  This… existence – this life – begins to make sense to me, at last.  It is a wonderful thing – this life I have.  I shall strive to be worthy of it.  I cannot wait to see what happens next.”

As far as crossovers go, Millennium was okay.  Not the greatest.  With this particular issue, I was far more interested in what Firestorm was up to than the Manhunters or the New Guardians.  Richard Howell’s art is fine and John Ostrander’s story is a little flat – but good considering what he had to work with.  I give Firestorm: The Nuclear Man #68 a C.

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Firestorm: The Nuclear Man #63 (September 1987)

08 Wednesday May 2013

Posted by FKAjason in Captain Atom Versus Super-Heroes

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Amanda Waller, Batman, Blue Beetle, Captain Atom, Captain Boomerang, Captain Marvel (Shazam), Chief Ferguson, Deadshot, Dick Giordano, Dr. Fate, Firestorm, Guy Gardner, Joe Brozowski, John Ostrander, John Workman, Killer Frost, Martian Manhunter, Martin Stein, Mikhail Arkadin, Mister Miracle, Modern Age Captain Atom, Multiplex, Nansi Hoolahan, Oberon, Parasite, Pozhar, Rick Flag, Ronald Reagan, Ronnie Raymond, Slipknot, Superman

“Rogue Hero”

  • Writer: John Ostrander
  • Pencils: Joe Brozowski
  • Inks: Dick Giordano
  • Colors: Nansi Hoolahan
  • Letters: John Workman

In the previous issue of Firestorm, the titular character (whose secret identity is Ronnie Raymond and Martin Stein) interrupted a press conference being held by Vice President George H. W. Bush.  He has announced that he has begun to disarm nuclear weapons around the world, belonging to both the United States and the Soviet Union.  It is his intention to force the two super powers into nuclear disarmament.  This decision has proven to be unpopular with world leaders.  Already the president has contacted Amanda Waller, who says Belle Reve Prison can hold Firestorm (presumably meaning she will send the Suicide Squad after the nuclear man).  Firestorm has warned the governments, “…disarm your nuclear weapons or I will.  And next time I won’t transmute the warheads, I’ll detonate them.”

Cut to Nathaniel Adam, General Eiling, and Dr. Megala watching the story unfold on television (Nathaniel’s hair is brown rather than white).  Eiling is pissed off, naturally, but Nate seems somewhat sympathetic to Firestorm’s cause.  Both Megala and Eiling argue that Firestorm’s plan will do more harm than good.  Nate says that Firestorm may be a fool, but a well-meaning one.

At the Justice League’s New York headquarters, Green Lantern Guy Gardner is itching to go after “that commie scum.”  Martian Manhunter says, “Not unless we all agree.”  Dr. Fate, Captain Marvel, Blue Beetle, and Mister Miracle attempt to stop Guy from going after Firestorm, but it is Oberon who stops the agitated Green Lantern (using an oversize mallet).

In the Oval Office, President Reagan has asked Superman to go after Firestorm.  The man of steel declines, indicating he is also sympathetic to Firestorm’s plight.  Reagan then addresses the nation, saying he and Premier Gorbachev are neither accepting or declining Firestorm’s ultimatum.  They want a face-to-face meeting with the super-hero.

Watching the address on television, Professor Stein seems quite pleased with the outcome.  As he tells Ronnie, “they have no idea we’re bluffing.”  Ronnie says it sounds like a trap to him, but goes along with the Professor.  As Firestorm, they go to police chief Bernard Ferguson and ask him to pass along word that he’ll meet Reagan the next day at the Statue of Liberty at noon.  He wants Reagan to come alone.

Meanwhile, in the Soviet Union, Mikhail Arkadin is demonstrating the powers he obtained in the Chernobyl disaster.  Mikhail was introduced in Firestorm #62, but is now wearing a modified Rocket Red suit and is being called “Pozhar.”  Arkadin will play an important role in Firestorm’s life in the next few issues.

Noon the next day, Firestorm arrives at the Statue of Liberty.  Reagan is there, and asks that the hero touch down and talk with him.  Ronnie feels like something is wrong, and indeed it is.  He is bum rushed by Captain Atom.
firestorm.v2.63
Cap tells Firestorm he’s caused an international incident.  He reminds Firestorm that he took the nuclear man down once before, and is capable of doing it again.  Firestorm brushes off Cap’s atomic blast and says he won’t be stopped by “some headline-hunting glory hog.”  He then punches Cap right in the silver face.  He tells Stein he thinks he broke his hand, to which Stein replies that Ronnie is using the same tactics he did last time he fought Captain Atom, and those tactics failed him.

Firestorm conjures up a kryptonite bat, hoping Captain Atom shares the same weakness as Superman (he does not), and Cap is knocked back.  Firestorm then rains bricks on Cap, who calls Firestorm a “brat.”  Firestorm then smashes Cap between two boulders, momentarily stopping Atom.  Stein warns Ronnie that he feels a seizure coming on (Professor Stein has a brain tumor and is dying).  Captain Atom realizes there is something wrong with Firestorm, but is still resigned to bring him in.

Captain Atom grabs Firestorm from behind, and Firestorm fires a blast at Reagan.  Atom quickly flies down to intercept the blast, which turns out to be a huge ball of harmless daisies.  Firestorm takes off towards the city and Captain Atom follows.

The chase leads them through the offices of a comic book publisher in New York City (an unnamed comic book publisher, specifically the office of a comic book writer that may or may not be John Ostrander).  There is a miscolored panel at the bottom of page 18 in which Captain Atom’s head is not silver.  The two heroes cut a path of destruction through DC’s offices, passing (among other people) Joe Brozowski and Denny O’Neil talking about Joe drawing the very page they are on (meta!).

Leaving the DC offices, Captain Atom blasts Firestorm into another building.  When he goes down after him, Firestorm is nowhere to be found.  Captain Atom sees and weak old man and a young redheaded jock and asks, “Where is he?!”  The redhead says Firestorm flew through the floor.  Captain Atom curses and flies off looking for Firestorm.  Of course, the old man and the jock were Professor Stein and Ronnie Raymond (Captain Atom does not know Firestorm’s secret identities).  I really liked that move.

As Ronnie helps Professor Stein home, Reagan addresses the nation on television.  He says the U.S. will not “accede to the ultimatums of terrorists.”  At Belle Reve Prison, Amanda Waller is on the phone with some government big wig (possibly General Eiling).  She says she has the Suicide Squad ready to bring Firestorm in.  On her desk are pictures of Killer Frost, Rick Flag, the Parasite, Captain Boomerang, Deadshot, Slipknot, and Multiplex.

I loved this issue.  I was always fond of Captain Atom/Firestorm stories, whether they were fighting together or against each other.  Over the years, I’ve gone back and forth on John Ostrander.  Some of his stuff I really loved but some of it I really hated.  This story is an A+.  It sets up a lot of big changes coming Firestorm’s way.  I also really liked the way Joe Brozowski drew Captain Atom.  Except for the couple of coloring mistakes, this was a beautiful book.  An A- for art gives this issue of Firestorm an A rating.

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